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AtricleZine - Email Filters Catch Dolphins Along With Sharks
Gain Publicity - Sponsor or Donate to an Event t your newsletters for screening of content or technical problems that might trigger spam filters before mailing.
Most businesses do provide funds for non-profit organizations. If it is not in the way of cash, it is certainly through sponsorships and donations in kind. Some of the larger corporations have a budget for sponsorships and donations that they spend every year. Find out what they support, many times it is a local charity or non-profit. Although you will not likely be able to do much with this information business-wise, you will be able to bring it up in a conversation. Nothing pleases people more than when you notice what they do for others. Besides donations and sponsorships, companies may offer seminars and speakers for events. Find out what topics they offer and see which ones you can attend. These speeches will also give you more information.A business that contributes to the community does necessarily want to be solicited for donations; they just want to show that they do their part for their community. More often than not, they will have members of their staff join organizations and sit on the board of directors. If you belong to the same organization, your chances of doing business with that company will be increased but there is still no guarantee.The information you gather is just simply that - it is information. Information is only a tool by which you can gain insights into the operation of a company. It does not give you a leg up on your competition unless they are not doing their homework. Use the information wisely.Businesses that do sponsor or donate may be looking for the publicity associated with your event. Most organizations want to be seen as supporters of the community and the best way to do that is have it publically announced. Keep in mind the more PR components you offer in your sponsorship and donation sol Of course, spammers could also abuse such a service to get their own mail past the filters. Others back the idea of an Internet-wide white list along the lines of web site privacy site TRUSTe. Spam-busting campaigners believe the only effective method of addressing the problem is through simple, direct legislation to:
Meanwhile, ashile the world waits for more countries to introduce tough anti-spam legislation, online publishers must continue to be vigilant. How to avoid the junk folder Choose the subject line and words in your emails carefully if you don't want to end up in the junk file. More people are setting up their email programs to filter incoming mail automatically for classic junk mail keywords and symbols (eg “advertisement”, “free”, “rich”, “porn”, "lover,", "opt-in," "e-mail”, “money-back guarantee”, “teen”, “sex”, ! # or $, removal instructions, all capitals). Drop all hype and advertising-speak from your subject lines and messages. Apart from saving you from the filters, honest concise text is preferred by the impatient, overloaded online reader. Online publishers wishing to avoid being trashed should send a welcome message to new subscribers or correspondents telling them how your messages will appear (eg “the newsletter will appear from yvette@brizcomm.com.au”) and suggesting they add the address to the white or green list of their email program. Set up test accounts with popular email providers such as AOL, Yahoo a Logo Upgrades and Simplicity What’s the point in spending hours preparing a newsletter, message or report if it's automatically filtered into the junk folder before the recipient even sees it?
A logo should be thought of as a living design. As times and styles change, the logo design should keep up. Otherwise, a logo starts to look old and tired - not things you want to portray to your customers. Mild changes can make a big improvement while still helping retain the image your customers have come to recognize and trust. The changes can be simple - think of it as a graphical facelift. Lightening or darkening of colors, slight changes in font type or size, and variation of the overall shape are little things that can make a big difference.When customers look at your logo, they automatically associate your logo with what it's like to do business with you. A old, tired logo might make customers feel like your business is old and tired too. That's why some mild updates can go a long way. Too many changes can alienate your customers, but smart, subtle updates will help them feel like your business is improving and staying "with it."Every once in awhile I'll come across a logo that includes several icons, several fonts, taglines, and more. I suspect most of these logos are the result of a CEO not being able to decide the one thing his company stands for. So he throws in everything, hoping his customers will recognize something that appeals to them. But the result is exactly the opposite. These logos are so crowded and complex they are impossible to remember and appeal to no one - except the CEO. The best logos are simple. A single icon and easy-to-read logotype. And often no icon at all. When you're ready to create your logo, keeping it simple will help your customers recognize and remember who you are and what service your provide. And that is critical to the long-term success of your company. Spam threatens to choke the communication channels promising global freedom of expression. Internet Service Providers (ISPs), corporate server administrators and end users are increasingly using new anti-spam technology to try to stem the relentless tide of junk email flooding the Net. The problem is: how can we prevent the dolphins from being caught along with the sharks? The origin of ‘spam’ SPAM is a pink canned luncheon meat immortalised in Monty Python’s spam-loving Vikings sketch. In an Internet context, lowercase spam refers to unsolicited commercial or bulk email (such as get-rich-quick schemes, miracle cures, weight loss, Viagra, lotteries, loans, pornography and Nigerian sob stories) and allegedly originated in a MUD/MUSH community. Of more practical use is the origin of the actual spam mail itself. Where does all the junk come from? In the mid-90s, Usenet newsgroups (also called "discussion groups" or "bulletin boards") were the number one source of email addresses for spammers. Today, the most common origin is web pages, especially if they’re listed in a search engine or directory. Some people have tried foiling address-seeking spambots by inserting the word “UNSPAM” in capitals in the middle of all email addresses on their sites. This stops auto spammers working but enables human beings to work out what to do. Spammers also harvest addresses from headers of messages you send to friends who forward them to their friends (a good reason for using BCC -- blind carbon copy rather than simple CC which displays all recipients – although some people filter out mail sent using BCC as many spammers also use it). Other sources include open e-mail discussion lists and web pages that invite you to "insert your address here to be on a 'do not mail' list”. Spammers can simply guess addresses by generating lists of popular names and random words attached to common domains (bob@aol.com, john@hotmail.com). Once on a spam list, the only way to get off is to change addresses. If you reply or respond to instructions to “remove”, your message will simply confirm your address is valid and you’ll get even more junk. Depending on your email client, you can try tracing junk back to its owner by contacting the server listed in the full message header information (the From address is generally fake - check your Help files to find out how to "reveal full headers"). How to stop spam Despite legislation against unsolicited commercial email, the volume of junk is increasing alarmingly. The simplistic oft-cited fix -- “just hit delete” -- is only a bandaid solution and fails to discourage the junk merchants. Self-regulation and industry codes are difficult to enforce. ISPs face problems if they disconnect service to spammers under some countries' telecommunications laws. Technical solutions have centred on filtering technology. Types of filters Many corporations and ISPs filter incoming mail on or after delivery. Server-side filtering software typically looks at the headers, subject line and/or contents of the message. Some filters -- and their users -- are smarter than others. SpamAssassin is an open-source, collaborative, community anti-spam effort based on filtering rules to analyse email content. The software gives each message a score based on how many rules it breaks. Any programmer can suggest rules for new releases of the software which spots, not blocks, spam. ISPs and server administrators then decide whether to send suspect mail to junk folders, automatically delete mail tagged as spam, or bounce it back to sender. Unfortunately for email publishers, some of the filter rules are too broad or the threshold is set too low. Many innocent messages are being lumped in with the guilty. One of my newsletter readers notified me that his ISP had tagged a recent issue as spam - SPAM: -------------------- Start SpamAssassin results ---------------------- Best practice in e-newsletter publishing -- and now law in many countries -- is to enable your readers to unsubscribe easily yet the word “unsubscribe” or similar would lead to your newsletter being blocked by filters such as SpamAssassin. Just look at the seemingly innocuous words on the constantly changing list of tests SpamAssassin performs on mail messages to determine whether they're spam. Some desktop applications, such as MailShield and MailWasher, pre-set the rules and tag or delete mail without the user having to do anything. To ensure they receive wanted mail, email users can add favourite mailing lists to a “white” or “green” list so the mail ends up in a specific folder. Arbitrary and unpredictable email filtering, as with web content filtering, can backfire and cost time, money and frustration -- the very things filters were designed to save. Tracking down problems and dealing with aggravated users or administrators wastes resources that could be spent creating content, marketing and improving customer service. Many filters can be imposed only after you have received unsolicited email from each source, meaning you have to respond manually to every single spammer. Spammers regularly change their email addresses to bypass filters. "Qualitative" filters can try to detect junk mail from unknown sources but legitimate mail can be inadvertently trashed in the process (“false positives”) while some junk mail still gets through (“false negatives”). Filters are becoming a serious problem with many legitimate opt-in publishers being mistaken for spammers and blacklisted. Once on a black list, the only way to be unblocked is to contact the ISP and ask to be placed on a white list. While some e-newsletter publishing tools let you monitor how many messages are opened or bounced, you might never know which readers are being filtered unless you know which email program they're using. Even then, the recipient might just be busy, uninterested, on leave or not receiving your message. Some filter programs don’t even notify you that your message was blocked while others bounce back mail with “sensitive" content without specifying the rejected words. On another occasion my own free weekly e-newsletter was blocked on its way to at least two subscribers thanks to Trend SMEX Content Filter detecting "sensitive content" yet the “naughtiest” word I could find was "teenage". Pity the poor medical publishers who often use “controversial” words such as “breast” or “penis” in their newsletters. You might be able to track down the reason you were blocked by examining the full header information (ask your subscribers to forward the entire copy of your junked message). The header should list filter rules that the message violated, if the ISP uses software such as SpamAssassin. If not filtering, then what? Some online publishers advocate web services where you submit your newsletters for screening of content or technical problems that might trigger spam filters before mailing. Of course, spammers could also abuse such a service to get their own mail past the filters. Others back the idea of an Internet-wide white list along the lines of web site privacy site TRUSTe. Spam-busting campaigners believe the only effective method of addressing the problem is through simple, direct legislation to:
Meanwhile, ashile the world waits for more countries to introduce tough anti-spam legislation, online publishers must continue to be vigilant. How to avoid the junk folder Choose the subject line and words in your emails carefully if you don't want to end up in the junk file. More people are setting up their email programs to filter incoming mail automatically for classic junk mail keywords and symbols (eg “advertisement”, “free”, “rich”, “porn”, "lover,", "opt-in," "e-mail”, “money-back guarantee”, “teen”, “sex”, ! # or $, removal instructions, all capitals). Drop all hype and advertising-speak from your subject lines and messages. Apart from saving you from the filters, honest concise text is preferred by the impatient, overloaded online reader. Online publishers wishing to avoid being trashed should send a welcome message to new subscribers or correspondents telling them how your messages will appear (eg “the newsletter will appear from yvette@brizcomm.com.au”) and suggesting they add the address to the white or green list of their email program. Set up test accounts with popular email providers such as AOL, Yahoo an What's So Important About Residual Income Anyway tmail.com).
Robert Kiyosaki in his book, Rich Dad Poor Dad, coined the phrase make your money work for you rather than you work for money. In the internet marketing world this concept has caught on and the resulting buzzword is residual income.If residual income is your ultimate online business goal then the best affiliate programs to join are those that offer a residual income – rather than a once off commission.However, the very best affiliate programs offer residual income and have products or services that sell well online.Research by forrester.com suggests that the highest selling products online are books and software.With this in mind I've flagged some major industries that have affiliate programs that offer residual income and products or services that sell well online.The Internet Marketing IndustryInternet marketers understand affiliate marketing – they realise that in order to attract long term loyal affiliates they need to offer high commissions and excellent tools.In addition, the top marketers use various direct response marketing methods to fine tune their sales process and therefore make more sales per visitor than other industries.Allan Gardyne, the founder of associate-programs.com and a recognised expert in the affiliate marketing industry has a top ten list of internet marketing affiliate programs.Off-course Allan's #1 affiliate program is Ken Evoy’s 5 Pillar Affiliate Program. Ken's affiliate program offers lifetime commissions on his flagship product Site Build It.Ken suggests that 40% of site build it owners end up with 2 or more site build it sites – this is good for his affiliates as they get rewarded for the extra sales.The Investing Industry Once on a spam list, the only way to get off is to change addresses. If you reply or respond to instructions to “remove”, your message will simply confirm your address is valid and you’ll get even more junk. Depending on your email client, you can try tracing junk back to its owner by contacting the server listed in the full message header information (the From address is generally fake - check your Help files to find out how to "reveal full headers"). How to stop spam Despite legislation against unsolicited commercial email, the volume of junk is increasing alarmingly. The simplistic oft-cited fix -- “just hit delete” -- is only a bandaid solution and fails to discourage the junk merchants. Self-regulation and industry codes are difficult to enforce. ISPs face problems if they disconnect service to spammers under some countries' telecommunications laws. Technical solutions have centred on filtering technology. Types of filters Many corporations and ISPs filter incoming mail on or after delivery. Server-side filtering software typically looks at the headers, subject line and/or contents of the message. Some filters -- and their users -- are smarter than others. SpamAssassin is an open-source, collaborative, community anti-spam effort based on filtering rules to analyse email content. The software gives each message a score based on how many rules it breaks. Any programmer can suggest rules for new releases of the software which spots, not blocks, spam. ISPs and server administrators then decide whether to send suspect mail to junk folders, automatically delete mail tagged as spam, or bounce it back to sender. Unfortunately for email publishers, some of the filter rules are too broad or the threshold is set too low. Many innocent messages are being lumped in with the guilty. One of my newsletter readers notified me that his ISP had tagged a recent issue as spam - SPAM: -------------------- Start SpamAssassin results ---------------------- Best practice in e-newsletter publishing -- and now law in many countries -- is to enable your readers to unsubscribe easily yet the word “unsubscribe” or similar would lead to your newsletter being blocked by filters such as SpamAssassin. Just look at the seemingly innocuous words on the constantly changing list of tests SpamAssassin performs on mail messages to determine whether they're spam. Some desktop applications, such as MailShield and MailWasher, pre-set the rules and tag or delete mail without the user having to do anything. To ensure they receive wanted mail, email users can add favourite mailing lists to a “white” or “green” list so the mail ends up in a specific folder. Arbitrary and unpredictable email filtering, as with web content filtering, can backfire and cost time, money and frustration -- the very things filters were designed to save. Tracking down problems and dealing with aggravated users or administrators wastes resources that could be spent creating content, marketing and improving customer service. Many filters can be imposed only after you have received unsolicited email from each source, meaning you have to respond manually to every single spammer. Spammers regularly change their email addresses to bypass filters. "Qualitative" filters can try to detect junk mail from unknown sources but legitimate mail can be inadvertently trashed in the process (“false positives”) while some junk mail still gets through (“false negatives”). Filters are becoming a serious problem with many legitimate opt-in publishers being mistaken for spammers and blacklisted. Once on a black list, the only way to be unblocked is to contact the ISP and ask to be placed on a white list. While some e-newsletter publishing tools let you monitor how many messages are opened or bounced, you might never know which readers are being filtered unless you know which email program they're using. Even then, the recipient might just be busy, uninterested, on leave or not receiving your message. Some filter programs don’t even notify you that your message was blocked while others bounce back mail with “sensitive" content without specifying the rejected words. On another occasion my own free weekly e-newsletter was blocked on its way to at least two subscribers thanks to Trend SMEX Content Filter detecting "sensitive content" yet the “naughtiest” word I could find was "teenage". Pity the poor medical publishers who often use “controversial” words such as “breast” or “penis” in their newsletters. You might be able to track down the reason you were blocked by examining the full header information (ask your subscribers to forward the entire copy of your junked message). The header should list filter rules that the message violated, if the ISP uses software such as SpamAssassin. If not filtering, then what? Some online publishers advocate web services where you submit your newsletters for screening of content or technical problems that might trigger spam filters before mailing. Of course, spammers could also abuse such a service to get their own mail past the filters. Others back the idea of an Internet-wide white list along the lines of web site privacy site TRUSTe. Spam-busting campaigners believe the only effective method of addressing the problem is through simple, direct legislation to:
Meanwhile, ashile the world waits for more countries to introduce tough anti-spam legislation, online publishers must continue to be vigilant. How to avoid the junk folder Choose the subject line and words in your emails carefully if you don't want to end up in the junk file. More people are setting up their email programs to filter incoming mail automatically for classic junk mail keywords and symbols (eg “advertisement”, “free”, “rich”, “porn”, "lover,", "opt-in," "e-mail”, “money-back guarantee”, “teen”, “sex”, ! # or $, removal instructions, all capitals). Drop all hype and advertising-speak from your subject lines and messages. Apart from saving you from the filters, honest concise text is preferred by the impatient, overloaded online reader. Online publishers wishing to avoid being trashed should send a welcome message to new subscribers or correspondents telling them how your messages will appear (eg “the newsletter will appear from yvette@brizcomm.com.au”) and suggesting they add the address to the white or green list of their email program. Set up test accounts with popular email providers such as AOL, Yahoo a The Blog Search - America's New Favorite Pastime age has been alteredBlogging- What Is It?Blog- short for WeblogAuthoring a blog, maintaining a blog or adding an article to an existing blog is called "blogging". This ability to organize and present articles in a composed fashion is much of what makes blogging a popular personal publishing tool. Typically, blog authors compose their articles in a web-based interface, such as the ones provided by Blogger.com, Blog-City.com, Wordpress.org, etc. (you can find plenty of other free blog providers using your favorite search engine).Blogs might be maintained from personal computers, or they might be updated using moblogging technology - web-enabled mobile phones or hand-held devices. However, the blogging community is vibrant and not restricted to the technical elite. Where the Internet is about availability of information, blogging is about making information creation available to anyone.Creating Your Own Free Blog Is EasyFor most free blogging providers, you simply create an account, then fill in a title and description for your blogging Web page. Once your blog has been setup, you're ready to start blogging!Blogging SoftwareIn early 1999, blogging software entered the scene, enabling anybody to place a blog on their existing website or simply have a blog hosted under their own domain. Any tech-savvy user can download and install blogging software themselves. Most blogging software doesn't require an extensive infrastructure. And because most of it is open-sourced, developers can extend it to work with other software or additional blogging tools.Blogging Tips1. Blogging completely anonymously is not a good idea, because people reading your blog will feel disconnected from you and your writings- and with all of SPAM: so you can recognise or block similar unwanted mail in future. SPAM: See http://spamassassin.org/tag/ for more details. SPAM: SPAM: Content analysis details: (13.2 hits, 6 required) SPAM: Hit! (1.5 points) BODY: Asks you to click below SPAM: Hit! (0.2 points) BODY: No such thing as a free lunch (1) SPAM: Hit! (2.6 points) BODY: Instant Access button SPAM: Hit! (3.5 points) URI: URL of page called "unsubscribe" SPAM: Hit! (4.1 points) URI: 'remove' URL contains an email address SPAM: Hit! (2.1 points) BODY: FONT Size +2 and up or 3 and up SPAM: Hit! (0.0 points) BODY: Includes a URL link to send an email SPAM: Hit! (-0.8 points) BODY: Image tag with an ID code to identify you SPAM: SPAM: -------------------- End of SpamAssassin results --------------------- Even if you can identify the problems that raised your score, you can do little about it. Best practice in e-newsletter publishing -- and now law in many countries -- is to enable your readers to unsubscribe easily yet the word “unsubscribe” or similar would lead to your newsletter being blocked by filters such as SpamAssassin. Just look at the seemingly innocuous words on the constantly changing list of tests SpamAssassin performs on mail messages to determine whether they're spam. Some desktop applications, such as MailShield and MailWasher, pre-set the rules and tag or delete mail without the user having to do anything. To ensure they receive wanted mail, email users can add favourite mailing lists to a “white” or “green” list so the mail ends up in a specific folder. Arbitrary and unpredictable email filtering, as with web content filtering, can backfire and cost time, money and frustration -- the very things filters were designed to save. Tracking down problems and dealing with aggravated users or administrators wastes resources that could be spent creating content, marketing and improving customer service. Many filters can be imposed only after you have received unsolicited email from each source, meaning you have to respond manually to every single spammer. Spammers regularly change their email addresses to bypass filters. "Qualitative" filters can try to detect junk mail from unknown sources but legitimate mail can be inadvertently trashed in the process (“false positives”) while some junk mail still gets through (“false negatives”). Filters are becoming a serious problem with many legitimate opt-in publishers being mistaken for spammers and blacklisted. Once on a black list, the only way to be unblocked is to contact the ISP and ask to be placed on a white list. While some e-newsletter publishing tools let you monitor how many messages are opened or bounced, you might never know which readers are being filtered unless you know which email program they're using. Even then, the recipient might just be busy, uninterested, on leave or not receiving your message. Some filter programs don’t even notify you that your message was blocked while others bounce back mail with “sensitive" content without specifying the rejected words. On another occasion my own free weekly e-newsletter was blocked on its way to at least two subscribers thanks to Trend SMEX Content Filter detecting "sensitive content" yet the “naughtiest” word I could find was "teenage". Pity the poor medical publishers who often use “controversial” words such as “breast” or “penis” in their newsletters. You might be able to track down the reason you were blocked by examining the full header information (ask your subscribers to forward the entire copy of your junked message). The header should list filter rules that the message violated, if the ISP uses software such as SpamAssassin. If not filtering, then what? Some online publishers advocate web services where you submit your newsletters for screening of content or technical problems that might trigger spam filters before mailing. Of course, spammers could also abuse such a service to get their own mail past the filters. Others back the idea of an Internet-wide white list along the lines of web site privacy site TRUSTe. Spam-busting campaigners believe the only effective method of addressing the problem is through simple, direct legislation to:
Meanwhile, ashile the world waits for more countries to introduce tough anti-spam legislation, online publishers must continue to be vigilant. How to avoid the junk folder Choose the subject line and words in your emails carefully if you don't want to end up in the junk file. More people are setting up their email programs to filter incoming mail automatically for classic junk mail keywords and symbols (eg “advertisement”, “free”, “rich”, “porn”, "lover,", "opt-in," "e-mail”, “money-back guarantee”, “teen”, “sex”, ! # or $, removal instructions, all capitals). Drop all hype and advertising-speak from your subject lines and messages. Apart from saving you from the filters, honest concise text is preferred by the impatient, overloaded online reader. Online publishers wishing to avoid being trashed should send a welcome message to new subscribers or correspondents telling them how your messages will appear (eg “the newsletter will appear from yvette@brizcomm.com.au”) and suggesting they add the address to the white or green list of their email program. Set up test accounts with popular email providers such as AOL, Yahoo a Do You Use These Strategies to Manage Your Mood? and frustration -- the very things filters were designed to save.
Stress is our reaction to people or things going on around us. Sometimes these things are positive, i.e. a vacation, a promotion or a special event. Sometimes the things are negative, i.e. a traffic ticket, someone you care about is ill, or projects at work are not meeting deadlines.How do you manage your mood when:• There is too much to do and not enough time to do it in?• People around you seem to have time to do fun things and you don't?• Things are happening around you that you have no control over?• Projects at work are not meeting deadlines and you are working longer hours?Susan Vaugham, MD, a psychiatry professor at Columbia University states in her book, Half Empty, Half Full that optimists have the ability to feel in charge of themselves. This does not mean everything will go well. It means they will not be overwhelmed emotionally when things get hectic or do not go well.When you are unhappy about how things are going, there are three strategies which will help you move forward in a positive direction:1. Alter.2. Avoid.3. Accept.To decide which is the best strategy for you to use:• Ask yourself if you have control of the situation or if you can influence someone who does have control. If your answer is yes, often you can alter the situation by problem solving, direct communication, organizing and planning or time management. If your answer is no, altering is usually not an option. There is no point in focusing on things you cannot change.• Know what your top five values are. Ask yourself what is most important to you. The more you are living your values, the more satisfied you are with your life. Saying no or removing yourself helps you to a Tracking down problems and dealing with aggravated users or administrators wastes resources that could be spent creating content, marketing and improving customer service. Many filters can be imposed only after you have received unsolicited email from each source, meaning you have to respond manually to every single spammer. Spammers regularly change their email addresses to bypass filters. "Qualitative" filters can try to detect junk mail from unknown sources but legitimate mail can be inadvertently trashed in the process (“false positives”) while some junk mail still gets through (“false negatives”). Filters are becoming a serious problem with many legitimate opt-in publishers being mistaken for spammers and blacklisted. Once on a black list, the only way to be unblocked is to contact the ISP and ask to be placed on a white list. While some e-newsletter publishing tools let you monitor how many messages are opened or bounced, you might never know which readers are being filtered unless you know which email program they're using. Even then, the recipient might just be busy, uninterested, on leave or not receiving your message. Some filter programs don’t even notify you that your message was blocked while others bounce back mail with “sensitive" content without specifying the rejected words. On another occasion my own free weekly e-newsletter was blocked on its way to at least two subscribers thanks to Trend SMEX Content Filter detecting "sensitive content" yet the “naughtiest” word I could find was "teenage". Pity the poor medical publishers who often use “controversial” words such as “breast” or “penis” in their newsletters. You might be able to track down the reason you were blocked by examining the full header information (ask your subscribers to forward the entire copy of your junked message). The header should list filter rules that the message violated, if the ISP uses software such as SpamAssassin. If not filtering, then what? Some online publishers advocate web services where you submit your newsletters for screening of content or technical problems that might trigger spam filters before mailing. Of course, spammers could also abuse such a service to get their own mail past the filters. Others back the idea of an Internet-wide white list along the lines of web site privacy site TRUSTe. Spam-busting campaigners believe the only effective method of addressing the problem is through simple, direct legislation to:
Meanwhile, ashile the world waits for more countries to introduce tough anti-spam legislation, online publishers must continue to be vigilant. How to avoid the junk folder Choose the subject line and words in your emails carefully if you don't want to end up in the junk file. More people are setting up their email programs to filter incoming mail automatically for classic junk mail keywords and symbols (eg “advertisement”, “free”, “rich”, “porn”, "lover,", "opt-in," "e-mail”, “money-back guarantee”, “teen”, “sex”, ! # or $, removal instructions, all capitals). Drop all hype and advertising-speak from your subject lines and messages. Apart from saving you from the filters, honest concise text is preferred by the impatient, overloaded online reader. Online publishers wishing to avoid being trashed should send a welcome message to new subscribers or correspondents telling them how your messages will appear (eg “the newsletter will appear from yvette@brizcomm.com.au”) and suggesting they add the address to the white or green list of their email program. Set up test accounts with popular email providers such as AOL, Yahoo a Online Sweepstakes t your newsletters for screening of content or technical problems that might trigger spam filters before mailing.
Companies make sweepstakes available to consumers by three means: direct mail, telephone and the ever growing in popularity online method.Online sweepstakes are big business and give away billions of dollars, as well as cars, jewelry, vacations, shopping sprees, and other grand items. On the flip side, one can win as little as $1. But a free dollar is a free dollar!In order to get entered in a particular sweepstakes, you may have to sign up to receive various products or services. That is how the sweepstakes people earn their money. Another way for them to profit is by simply posting ads to their websites. When you see one of these ads, you may get the urge to purchase whatever it is advertising. These ads can take the forms of banners, pop-ups, or simple links.There are various sweepstakes sites online, and you should go over a few to get yourself familiar with how they work. There are hourly, daily and weekly games, as well as one time chances to win fabulous prizes. There is plenty to win on thousands of online sweepstakes websites -- a win that could change your life.The fact that you can research and enter thousands of online sweepstakes websites is what separates online games from other sweepstakes. Usually, each of these sites offers a variety of contests to enter with all sorts of prizes of varying values. So, go ahead, make your choices on what sweepstake you want to play and win some prizes. Good luck! Of course, spammers could also abuse such a service to get their own mail past the filters. Others back the idea of an Internet-wide white list along the lines of web site privacy site TRUSTe. Spam-busting campaigners believe the only effective method of addressing the problem is through simple, direct legislation to:
Meanwhile, ashile the world waits for more countries to introduce tough anti-spam legislation, online publishers must continue to be vigilant. How to avoid the junk folder Choose the subject line and words in your emails carefully if you don't want to end up in the junk file. More people are setting up their email programs to filter incoming mail automatically for classic junk mail keywords and symbols (eg “advertisement”, “free”, “rich”, “porn”, "lover,", "opt-in," "e-mail”, “money-back guarantee”, “teen”, “sex”, ! # or $, removal instructions, all capitals). Drop all hype and advertising-speak from your subject lines and messages. Apart from saving you from the filters, honest concise text is preferred by the impatient, overloaded online reader. Online publishers wishing to avoid being trashed should send a welcome message to new subscribers or correspondents telling them how your messages will appear (eg “the newsletter will appear from yvette@brizcomm.com.au”) and suggesting they add the address to the white or green list of their email program. Set up test accounts with popular email providers such as AOL, Yahoo and HotMail to see if your messages are getting through. Beware Microsoft Outlook's "junk e-mail filters" which, when turned on, colour or delete messages considered spam based on a filters.txt file. I searched for the filters.txt file on my PC to see which words were no-gos and was surprised to see so many seemingly harmless words. Use a professional list hosting service unless you can afford an experienced in-house support staff. E-newsletter publishing is becoming a highly specialised and complex field – don’t risk your reputation to amateurs. Ensure your list host monitors other clients to ensure they’re publishing to only opt-in recipients -- if opt-out mailers, rental lists and spammers are blacklisted, you might be guilty by association. Insist on detailed bounce reports for every issue you send out. You should be able to see which names bounced and the exact reasons (eg “mailbox full”, “address does not exist” or the frustrating “unknown”). Just because your bounce report says your mail was delivered, doesn’t mean it did. Many filters stop email after the “not-bounced” signal has been sent. Monitor your open and clickthrough reports for unusual patterns. Read all reader feedback, particularly if readers are having trouble subscribing or getting your mail. Chances are they might have to ask (or scream at) their ISP or techies to add you to a white list. (Of course, you need to publish quality content if you want your readers to jump up and down when they don’t get it.) Many permission-based publishers include their newsletter or trademark in square brackets in the subject line to avoid being filtered. Other ethical publishers, including me, have resorted to disguising known filter trigger words by inserting unusual characters or deliberate typos -- for instance, using f^ee instead of free or sp*m instead of spam. It's just a matter of time before the spammers work around these "tricks". Bastardising or censoring our language to suit new communications technology would seem an extreme solution -- not to mention bitterly ironic -- but what’s the alternative? Useful links Coalition Against Unsolicited Commercial Email The Net Abuse FAQ How to show full header details for your email program - Put junk mail in its place (tips on using Outlook) - Tips on writing hype-free online content
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